Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 328, Hammond, Lake County, 12 June 1922 — Page 6

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THE TIMES Monday. June 12, 1922.

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Silas Dorothy, Evans and Miss -Frieda "Kurz will entertain the Hammond rnrrhellenic Association r on Tuesday evening: at half past six o'clock at a. picnic supper In their ; apartment, number four. In. the rarkview building:.

.The Junior Standard Bearers, w.io were to have met this evening, have .postponed their meeting- until Monday, June the twenty-sixth. ' Miss Alys and Miss Virgene Hamraond drove to Delalleld, Wisconsin, ftn Friday, and visited at St. John's rXi'Ttary Academy, where their brother, Thomas, is a student cadet. ' Toiri and Herbert Lansendorff, son of Rev. and Mrs. Peter Langendorff, returned home with Hiss Alys and ZV'Iss Virg-ene, accompanied by Miss Katherine Huchel, who attended the ir-.ilitary ball of the academy on Friday evening1. The members of the Sunbonnets Club and a few invited gruests will leave early tomorrow morning- for "Wilmette, where they will spend the clay with Mrs. L. W. Jones, a daughter of Mrs, E. DeBrial, who is a member of Hie club. Mrs. Emma Tv'itham and son, Clifford, who has been at Purdue L'nl;versity the past year, motored from , Lafayette yesterday to spend the .summer with Mr. and Mrs. H. R. 'Ugrhty of Van Duren street. The G. K. Pleasure Club will meet this .evening at Moltke Hall on Kast State street. All members are urged' to be present. Miss Josephine Jvrlnbill, daughter cf Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Krinbill of "Warren street, was graduated on Thursday from the National Kintfersnrten School of Chicago. Miss Krinbill will spend tho summer here and in the fall will accept a position as , instructor in a private kinderrarten at Imwners Grove. Illinois. Jie-r many friends extend congratulations and many good wishes. Miss Anna Zea and Clarence C. Goff. both of Hammond, were licensed to marry in Chicago on Saturday. Miss Sarah Dierks. Miss Ruby Duel aVJ Miss Anna Emery will entertain this evening In Miss Emery's homo on Ruth street for Miss Erva Marie Tibbetts, who will be married soon. There will be a meeting of All Saints' high school alumnae on Tuesday evening at the school. Mrs. George Wall and two weeks cid son. Robert Edwin, have returned from St. Margaret's hospital to their home on Bauer street. Cordon Blythe Anderson of Philaie'.phia spent the week-end with A. Murray Turner of Glendale Park V.M'.inm Calkins Relief Corps 248 r. oeiebnte Flag Day on June :.; .; teenth by having an ice cream racial in the evening at Harrison l'ark. All the members are reQucsied to attend. The informal dancing party at the Country Club on Saturday evening was a big success and the many fruests greatly enjoyed ilcKelvey's jolty music. The Men's Brotherhood Class and the Woman's Bible Class of the First Baptist Church had a picnic on Friday evening in the Forest Preserve. There were about fiftyseven guests in attendance and a good time -was enjoyed by everyone. A plentiful pi-r.ic sunitr was served and a bail pamo enjoyed with a number of games and contests for good measure. Trinity League will meet tomorrow evening in the church parlors a,V"5"altham street and Park riar-e Members and their friends are cordially invited. Mrs. Charles E. Cormany of Milwaukee spent the week-end ti:e house g-uest of Mr. and Mrs. O. a. Krinbill of Warren street, and incidentally attended the commencement exercises of the Xatlonal Kindergarten School cf Chicago on --Thursday, when her niece, Mi "Josephine Krinbill, was graduated. ' ft 9 Plans hava been completed for the jjinnual banquet tomorrow evening 'to be given for the alumnae of St. Joeeph's School in the Lyndora Hotel. A large attendance is ei"patted, inasmuch as a great many 'reservations tave been made. . The South Side Pinochle Club was .very pleasantly entertained on SatMiCay evening- by Mr. and Mrs. Jo--ph( Rlblsky in their home on Dyer . .Viotrlvard. There were three tables .0X' cards and the honors were made 2-s? llr. and Mrs. J. C. Xowlan, Mrs. - ! ,'C Uoblitzol and Mr. Earl DeCamp. .Tile consolation prize was given to "JMr.V P.ib'isky. A prettily arranged "course- luncheon was served to the 'masts, who will meet in two weeks nt the homo of Mr. and Mrs. I, W. TtiBoell of Pauer street. LIVE LOCAL 7 HEWS ."ADS" WASSEY'S PLEATING y shop J';' 91 STATE STREET Hemstitch with Gold awd Stiver .''Thread J also snatch all colors. But'ton Holes, Button Covered. En -"intrfaerflng. BraldlnS, Beading. 'Phone iiniiimond 440. ' t-7-tf Hammond TV Musical College. '.For the study of music in ali ltd 6-3 : tranches. Phone 1523. -FOH SALE 52-lnch fumed oak buf- - fet. M. B. Eastwood, Griffit.i, !phcne 13SK. ' . 6-12 "Regular meeting of Golden Rule "Council Xo. 1. S. & D. of L.. Tuesday " veaing'at Odd Fellows hall. A attendance is desired. Busiiicss of importance. 6-12

WINNER OF MOVIE CONTEST MARRIES HANDSOME HERO OF WESTERN FILMS

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;. Kathleen Collins and hex husband, Guinn Williams. Texas being snch a huge state, this couple had to go to Los Angeles to find each other. When Kathleen Collins of San Antonio won the;Thomas Ince national beauty contest last year she little dreamed that she was also to win a screen hero husband who hailed from Ler own native Etate. She is now Mrs. Guinn Williams, wife of "Big Boy" Williams, star of many western dramas and son of Congressman and Mrs. Guinn Williams of Decatur, Texas. Future plans of the young couple have rot been disclosed, but it is thought that Miss Collins will soon appear in western plays in which her husband is featured,.

"Peanuts and popcorn. I-i-lce cre-eam cones and balloons, a-la-aJl colors." The sawdust ring. Its happy competitor is the carnival only when presente3 in such a fasTiion as that of the Xat-Reiss Shows, now having a jubilee at the corner of Calumet avenue and 150th Street. That carnivals are worthwhile and can Indecent is proven in this ins'anoe for the features are of high calibre. There are the five Hawaiians who strum their ukeleles and steel guitars and chant native songs in a romatic setting of the Hilo is'ands. Their "little Eddie" has a future assured because of his melodious voice. The ever-fascinating snake-charmer is "The STrange Girl, Ada. a petite brunette, who dispels all fears for vipers. ptanft's Society Circus, a little family .show, has an excellent showin.! of prancing ponies, pedigreed dogs, queer clowns. "Mysterious India," ruled over by the great Raymond, wields magic arts and illusions. The merry-go-round, the ferris wheel, Tumble Inn, the athletic arena and a number of side-shows offer a wonderful lot of fun for amusementseekers. The shows, which travel from coast to coast, are run under the management of a charming and gracious woman, Mrs. Xat-Reiss, who has as her able publicity man, Mr. Harry E. Bonnell. Mrs. XatReiss is a Chicago woman, and has been in the show business for some time. Her bfils are good and the

For Her Who Would A-Jaunting Go is- j By Carolyn T. Radnor-Lewij 1 'When Sprinir is In the air

nd a responsive tingle thrills you to your very being, then it is that the little microbe, Up-and-Doing, gets busy and stirs the dormancy of winter into action. Then a trip possibly only a motor ride into the country or a visit to the big city becomes a necessity. One jnst naturally longs to attire herself in .gayest raiment and be off to warm sunshine, and shooting buds. Then in the Spring every garment that makes for the comfort of the traveler looms large on the fashion horizon, be it only the Pullman robe. You can easily guess that it received its name because truly practical on the sleeper when one would woo Morpheus in comfort, but so completely garbed that any call to appear in public could be instantly answered, i It's the simplest kind of a negligee to make requiring about five yards and you can get the pattern at the shop where you purchase your pussy willow free. There's an elastic at the waist to add to its practicality and you may make it to slip over the head or fasten in surplice fashion. The fringe is just a matter of fancy, but a narrow frilling of the silk would be quite as effective or even a piping in a contrasting color. You can now procure bias bindings in all the clever little checks and bright colored organdies that take the most circuitous turns with the greatest ease. Just one sewing and the rawest edge is taken off in a highly successful manner. To the skilled with the needle this ingenious idea will appeal at once. Even the embryo sewer will be loud in its praise after one struggle with the old method. When it comes to a choice uca .M a f . of color you will hnd thirty shades of pussy willow fast to the tub and fast to sunPhoto Old

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light. You may elect black; " wmk",uu 'ul5 u. ,uu. or the new spring color, thi home, but its true purpose to be a Pullman radiant dent de lion, which fndJ "7 f owes its name to the tawny- thut Bhades to the and fa8t to headed blossom; or again sun-light pussy willow, the bright-eye blue that the former Princess Mary selected for her bridesmaids' frocks and for the favorite costumes in her trousseau. It's to be a silk year for all manner of under-dress, out o' door costumes and the simple little dresses that one delights to don in the 6pring when wraps mar be discarded, dresses that now will be even more endeared to women because thej make so nvsucccssfultrips to the tuK -

best to be had. Hammond people who do not visit the carnival grounds are missing a great ireat.

The seventeenth of June will be the last of the gala days in Hammond, so get Tom and Sally and the baby ready tonight for the fun of p. really Interesting carnival. SPORTSMEN . TO GATHER JUNE 25 Sportsmen of Lake county will meet for a grand old time "in the open. Sunday, June 25. On that day the fishermen "and huntsmen with their wives and children and friends will trek to Douglas Park in Hammond for the first picnic. This Is expected to become an annual feature of the activities of the Lake Ccunty Fish and Game Protective Association. LeGrand T. Mayer, president of the association, announced the plans this morning, at the same time calling upon all members to see to it that the turnout Is a record breaker. The program starts oft with a Big basket dinner. After that, as soon as the fellows feel that they are in condition, the shotgun shoot starts. Traps with clay pigeons will be used. This contest will be limited to members i in. n i 1 1 1 i mm Masters '

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of tho association. Ernest Vater and Joe Flllobeck has been appointed to look after the shoot. Next comes the bait casting contest. The casters will be tallied for distance and accuracy. Roy Olsen and Walt IJiUlkan have this in charge. After that the bt.vhr!! rabe staged. This will be a grudge affair. You know that spoi are divided into two general classes those that tramp the fields with gun and dog and those that snca.i along streams and lakes trying to snare fish. Each elae-s insists that his hobby is the cat'5 whiskers and that the other fellows are missing a lot. So the natural division for a baseball game was the line between hunters and fishers. Thus a team will be selected from each class. Of course It will not settle the old dispute as to which Is the eport supreme. Nothing will ever do that. But the game should provide a lot of wholesome amusement and exercise. There will also be some contests for children, probably kite flying and the like. There will be substantial prizes for winners In all events. During the hot weather of July and August there will be no regular meetings of the association. The boys will be too busy elsewhere anyway. The first meeting following the picnic will be the first Monday evening in September.

SAYS THEY STAND FOR LICENSE (Continued from page one.) fined Ty Judge Cleveland. He was sentenced to the county jail. Two weeks later he was back in Hammond. SIUAT SIEVE TZSrE "What are you doing here?" Cleveland asked him. Rose had the temerity to go about his business as though the law were a farce. He was In the Hammond business district. He was in the lery buixding where Judge Cleveland has his law offices. He expressed the greatest displeasure at Cleveland's questioning. Rose was out: He hadn't served his time. A stretch of several weeks was ahead of him. Did he serve? Why was he out? Who gave him permission to flout the law? Where was the sheriff? How many more were getting out under the same conditions? That might be answered by checking the records of the county farm. Then checking the prisoners. TAXING NO CHAN CSS But note this: Xeither Judge Cleveland, of Hammond, nor Judge Twyman, of East Chicago, is longer sentencing prisoners to the county jail. They are taking no more chances. When a defendant is sentenced and the judge wishes to Impose a minimum jail term, he gives the prisoner thirty-five days. That five days settles It. With the addition of five days the sentence Is lifted from th jurisdiction of the county authorities. The prisoner is sent to the penal farm at Putnamville. There they are taken care of. There they serve time. Xo flimsy excuse Is poured into the ears 'of etate authorities there, asking for a stay cf sentence. Xot there. But at the county seat it is different, says Judge Cleveland. At the county seat the kind hearted officials, so very kind, you know, listen to the prisoners tale of woe. They give them little vacations from their jail terms. Xice, is it not? Gary ALTHOUGH the chill has not keen taken off the water at Miller Beach Be A Budgeteer With the Federal Government seeking to get on a "budget basis," so that the taxpayers' money will not be wasted and so that economy and saving will be the watchwords in every department, it is sound common sense for everyone in the country to establish a budget system for himself or herself. The first aid to this is the 'Menter Plan of Home Budget,' an attractive little volume, which forces a person to watch where ,his dollars and cents go, whether for necessary living expenses or for pleasure. The 'Menter Plan,' according to its editor, aims to give the proper directions how to adapt it "to YOUR income and living conditions so that you can budget your earnings in a way that will reduce your expenditures and enable you to save, or to have money to invest in the many things you have always wanted but thought yon never could afford." An interesting feature of the book is the offer made by its publishers whereby $5,000 in cash prizes will be distributed to budget keepers throughout the country. It is easy to enter the contest and the details of it are: "To anyone who keeps the most complete and nearest to standard budget record, with savings record certified by a bank officer, for a period of at least six months, ending December 31st, 1922, the Menter company will give a first prize of $500. To all others adjudged as worthy of a prize, $t,500 will be distributed in $25 awards to 180 different persons, men or women, who send in the most complete record showing their actual budcret as. applied to their daily life, certified as to savings account by an officer of their savings bank." "Babson's Statistical Organization has checked up the percentages outlined in the Menter Budget System, and they are based on figures furnished by the Bureau of Iabor Statistics at Washington. The . 'Menter Plan of Home Budgets' is published by the Menter Company of New York City. PERTINENT THOUGHTS "What we are tomorrow Is what we make ourselves today. Idleness travels leisurely, and poverty soon overtakes it. Look upon your duties not as so many obligations, but as opportunities. Never climb a mountain till you come to It then perhaps it won't b there, ;

RAIL UNION LEADERS IN SHIRTSLEEVE MEETING

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The weather and arguments were to hot at the meeting in Cincinnati of the rail union chiefs that the conferees removed their coats during the session. Presihundreds of bathers took their first plunge of the season yesterday. ' CONTRACTS for the construction of five new school buildings in Garyhave been let by the school board. Each will cost approximately $65,000. KAST Side Fark will be the setting tomorrow (Tuesday nig-ht) for the first open air band concert of the season. The program will be given by the Gary M-unidpal band. EIGHTY-FIVE students at Emerson Higli School will receive diplomas at the graduation exercises to be held at the school auditoriiftn June 22. School will officially close Friday, June 23. GART fishermen are getting- prepared for the fifteenth when the closed season on bass will be up. According to former captain and now desk sergeant at the Gary po jfwa mk 'iff i it

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Abore, left to right: E. H. Fitzgerald, Frank Paquin, Timothy Healyj ! Edward Tetmeyer, W. H. Johnston, D. W. Helt, E. L. Oliver, Ed-

wara J. .Evans, tx, J. Carr and J. W. Barns. At table: President Bert M. Jewell of the shop crafts and W. J. Brown.

dent Bert M. Jewell, head of the rail shop crafts, sent out the call for the meeting. After consider able argument pro and con the delegates decided that tne strike lice station he will be ready to make his first cast, Thursday at midnight. THE- board of safety will hold their regular meeting in the chambers of Mayor Johnson at the city hall this afternoon. No other matters than the regular routine work will be taken up according to Secretary Rufus East. "THEY'VE got to show me, wftien they brag about making these low scores," says "Mae" Foland. after playing an 18 hole foursome at the Gary Country Club Saturday afternoon. "We agree Mac, it Is easier said than done." E. L. TODD, circulation manager of the Post-Tribune left yesterday frw Indianapolis where he will attend two con-entlons of circulation managers. He was accompanied by his daughter Aliss Mary Todd who is starting on an extended vacation.

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K GOLD BRICK always looEs goo3. It has to. Its promising appearance is it sole virtue. Ijooks alone will not sell goods today. Mer'cKandise with a name the name of its maker Has the call. For onfy the maker of wortHy goods can long afford to advertise. At the Higri Court of Public Opinion any other sort is soon condemned. " Wise merchants and manufacturers seeK tKe gooH papers to tell the story of their wares. .The publishers seek the reputable advertising for tKe readers' guidance. The well-informed buyer seeks news of good merchandise through die. columns of the home paper. w rpkjg proves tKe value of a3vertismg. Neither advertiser nor publisher can prosper without your patronage Therefore, it is to their advantage to cater to you. They do it, too. And it is distinctly to your advantage to Be guided Hy the message they lay before you the advertisements. Read tKem regularly!

as a result of wage cuts recently announced by the rail labor board should be delayed temporarily, put on their coats and called it a day. A Chicago newspaper track which weekly brings the Sunday editions to Gary was .struck by a Pennty. paasenger train No. 2 ehortly after six o'clock Saturday evening at Clark Junction. The tender of the engine went off the track delaying traffic for more than an hour.1 THE new $8,100 chemical and hose truck ordered recently from the Stutz firm at .Indianapolis has arrived and now a fixture at Station No. 3 at Tolleston. Every station In the city is now equipped with a combination truck of the latest design. OFFICER Conroy, detailed to take charge of the monster parking space a tthe ne wbeach at Miller yesterday, handled the hundreds of autos without an accident. It was a task and when Mr. Conroy got through late at night he was "ready for the hay." I ' Only

lilE heat wave proved to be th undoing of J. w. Watarbury, S3 year old iano king- In his attempt to break the world' long distance piano playing: record, at Justin Bros. House of Music at 640 Broadway. He was forced to stop after playing; II consecutive hours.

CHARGES of robbery have, been fllftd against Tom O'Toole, Lo Hart Thomas ilalley and Charley Lhr, Chicago Tellow Taxi driver who fuck up the Safe T Cros Drug; Store at 11th avenue and Broadway. Proseoutins; Attorney T. M. Kinder filed the cases direct in th Criminal court at Crown Tolnt. AN important meeting- of ths Gary Park Board members Is scheduled for this evening-. Conslderabls buslnean is scheduled to come up. EAST CHICAGO THE second Installment of incora tax will be due June 18th. WATCH out cor that meanderingdog: of yours. The city 4og catcher is on the Job. THE skeleton frame work on the $1,000,000 ras tank of the Indiana Natural Gas Co., at Forsyth and Riley E.oad is practically completed. FOR the benefit of their new church to be built on Guthrie St., Indiana Harbor, the St. Patrick's Catholic church will hold a tag day tomorrow. H. D. THOMAS has geen appointed superintenderut of the Inland Steel roll-ehop in the place of W. I Donnelly, who 'was wtransferred to another department. R- K. BATES, superintendent of the Eates Expanded Eteel Truss Co, reports large foreign orders in the last week. He announces that he will double his force this week. CAPTAIN Nicholas Makar assumed his duties as Acting Chief of Police, tfhls morning, in the absence of Chief Struss who left yesterday to attend the Chiefs' convention at I job Angeles. RCF. KLEMP.VER, manager of the Acme Auto Sales at 4601 Forsyth, says that The Times ads always brings !hlm results. Ruf. ought to know he's a great advertiser. NO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED Exp. solicitor. Applv Hammond Cleaners and Dyers. 7 42 State Line St.. phone S501 Ham. 6:12:3 1

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